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  2. Bambū - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bambū

    Bambū is a dessert drink chain that specializes in chè and other Vietnamese desserts and drinks. In 2021, QSR described the San Jose-based [1] company as "the original and only Vietnamese-Chè dessert drink chain". [2] Founded in 2008, the company operates more than 70 locations in 22 U.S. states and Canada, as of 2021. [3]

  3. Little Saigon, San Jose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Saigon,_San_Jose

    It is a hub for Silicon Valley's Vietnamese community and one of the largest Little Saigons in the world, [1] as San Jose has more Vietnamese residents than any city outside of Vietnam. [2] Vietnamese Americans and immigrants in San Jose make up ten percent of the city’s population and about eight percent of the county and South Bay Area.

  4. Lee's Sandwiches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee's_Sandwiches

    Lee Bros. Foodservice and Lee's Sandwiches headquarters in San Jose. A Lee's Sandwiches location in Westminster, California.. Lee's Sandwiches was founded by the Lê family, who owned a successful sugar refinery in An Giang Province in Vietnam before the Vietnam War and immigrated to the United States as boat people in July 1979.

  5. Little Saigon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Saigon

    Located in the Tenderloin district where 2,000 of the city's 13,000 Vietnamese-American residents live, the two-block stretch is more than 80% Vietnamese-owned. Unlike San Jose, with its larger ethnic Vietnamese population, the ethnic Chinese from Vietnam are well represented in San Francisco due to self-segregation.

  6. List of U.S. cities with large Vietnamese-American populations

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._cities_with...

    Vietnamese Americans vary in income level, with some being upper-class while others, particular those who came later, are working-class. Vietnamese Americans are mainly concentrated in metropolitan areas in the West, including Orange County, California, San Jose, California, and Houston, Texas.

  7. Viet Mercury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viet_Mercury

    Viet Mercury (Vietnamese: Việt Mercury) was a Vietnamese-language newspaper serving the Vietnamese American community in San Jose and the surrounding Silicon Valley area in California. It was published weekly by the San Jose Mercury News from 1999 to 2005; it also published daily for a time.

  8. Xe Đò Hoàng - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xe_Đò_Hoàng

    Xe Đò Hoàng was started by Linh Hoang Nguyen (Nguyễn Hoàng Linh) in 1999, with a few small vans. [1]He got the idea of starting a bus line connecting Little Saigon in Orange County with San Jose, the two communities with the largest concentration of Vietnamese people in the United States, while waiting for a flight at John Wayne Airport.

  9. Lang Van - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lang_Van

    Lang Van is the only US-based Vietnamese production company to operate both in the United States and Vietnam. It has retail stores in Westminster (Little Saigon) and San Jose, CA, Paris, France, Washington D.C., Houston, TX, and Atlanta, GA.